Yes, would like to help, and already did some awareness. Since i don't know yet where i can exactly help i will read good the help page.
But, i have suggestions: I've seen around the web wiki formats, if a free one could be applied would be good to fixing and editing free software sites, the reading documentation and specially translating in lots of languages by all free software users of course these features could also be coded on a site to use capabilities of wiki stuff without installing it. Someone made this one http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki some formats of wiki are not too good to read, so a careful choice would be needed. Plus, I've seen other day one good feature at the international airport site of my city it said "to edit this url click here" this is a great feature for fixings and then report broken url and codes it looks like your savannah does this somewhat but what i don't see is on the page a "edit url" i believe this would save you and folks tons hours of edits and would make quick updates and improvements instead of mailing bugs and savannah. If none of these i wrote make sense or have some other better way please disregard what i wrote. On Sat, May 17, 2014 at 5:17 AM, Richard Stallman <[email protected]> wrote: > [[[ To any NSA and FBI agents reading my email: please consider ]]] > [[[ whether defending the US Constitution against all enemies, ]]] > [[[ foreign or domestic, requires you to follow Snowden's example. ]]] > > Now questions, do you consider IRC free software? > > IRC is a protocol. There are free programs you can use to tal to > Wikipedia. > > *Quoting wikipedia* > > "Early Linux kernel developers ported GNU code, including the GNU C > Compiler, to run on Linux. Later, when the GNU developers learned of > Linux, > they adapted other parts of GNU to run on the Linux kernel. This work > filled the remaining gaps in running a completely free operating > system" > > Yes, that is what happened. > See http://www.gnu.org/gnu/the-gnu-project.html. > > Would you like to help our cause? See gnu.org/help. > > -- > Dr Richard Stallman > President, Free Software Foundation > 51 Franklin St > Boston MA 02110 > USA > www.fsf.org www.gnu.org > Skype: No way! That's nonfree (freedom-denying) software. > Use Ekiga or an ordinary phone call. > >
